Sunday, April 8, 2018

Youtube daily report Apr 8 2018

[♪ INTRO]

Accidental discoveries are a common theme in science.

The most famous is probably the discovery of penicillin, the world's first antibiotic.

It happened when Alexander Fleming noticed that the bacteria he was growing in Petri

dishes didn't seem to grow near mold.

Usually, we like to think of these findings as fluke events.

The reality, though, is that each discovery, even if triggered by a silly mistake or poor

lab practice, is actually the result of careful observation.

Someone had to make surprising connections to explain what they were seeing.

They didn't necessarily find the answer to whatever they were looking for, but they

did find something, and in many cases something much bigger.

So, here are 6 of our favorite times that scientists, totally by accident, but also

because they were clever enough to piece it all together, discovered some awesome things.

First up, an entirely new way to think about infection and sex drive.

Yeah, we're just jumping right in.

About five years ago, Canadian biologist Shelley Adamo was working on understanding whether

crickets' immune systems go haywire if the insects are stressed out by things like predators.

A student generously brought in their pet bearded dragon to serve as a very realistic

fear stimulus.

But unbeknownst to everyone, the lizard was carrying a deadly virus, at least deadly for

crickets.

So the insects were scared, but the real scare was to come.

Because a few weeks later, the crickets' insides had turned blue, and all of them were

dead.

Now, the normal reaction to this might be to just order some more insects, or find a

slightly less dangerous predator, and re-do the experiment.

But not Shelley Adamo.

She noticed that, before the crickets met their untimely demise, they were more interested

in sex than normal.

Which is just weird, because the typical response to an infection is to be sick, and not waste

energy trying to procreate.

Adamo was intrigued, and went on to document how the virus seemed to be working.

She saw that the virus increased its spread by making the insects more interested in mating.

That way, when the infected cricket's antennae touched its partner's mouth, something that

basically only happens during sex, the virus could get passed along.

In short, it's a cricket STD.

Or, as Adamo puts it, a parasitic aphrodisiac, which could be a great band name.

All this thanks to a bearded dragon that happened to be infected with a special cricket virus,

and a scientist who was in tune with the sexual activity of her crickets.

Next, a discovery based on a whole series of happy accidents.

Bob Ross would be proud.

In the early 2000s, physician-scientist George Liu was studying a certain kind of Streptococcus

bacteria known as type B. It's the version behind pneumonia, blood infections, and meningitis.

He wanted to figure out what made this kind of Strep so dangerous to people.

And to do that, he was specifically studying a certain toxin

that the bacteria uses to punch holes into host cells.

Liu was working with one strain of bacteria with the toxin,

which had a pigment that turned it a deep, rusty red,

and a mutant without it, which was a sort of bland white-ish color.

For a while, though, Liu wasn't making much progress.

Instead, he was struggling just to keep the bacteria alive, especially the mutant strain.

And you can't very well do experiments if you don't have stuff to work with!

Thankfully, he soon figured out why, by using his nose.

By chance, he smelled some residual bleach in the flasks he was using to grow the bacteria,

which explained the mass cell death.

Turns out that a labmate had kindly done the dishes,

but needed to be more vigilant about rinsing the bleach away.

Now, Liu's tests could have easily ended right there. Case closed.

But he was also curious why the bleach seemed more effective at killing the white mutant cells.

He thought that maybe it was because they didn't have any toxin in them.

And then came the second happy accident.

Around this same time, Liu's mom reminded him to eat his colorful veggies, as many moms do.

But that actually gave him a new idea.

The mutant cells couldn't produce any toxins,

but they also couldn't produce that reddish pigment.

So what if the toxin had nothing to do with it?

What if the pigment was protecting the bacteria instead?

See, part of the reason colorful vegetables are so good for you

is because they're chock full of antioxidants, molecules that protect cells from damage.

And those very molecules also give the foods their color.

So maybe the pigment in the regular cells was protecting them from the bleach.

But it wasn't clear why that would happen, either.

Eventually, all the pieces fell into place when Liu noticed

that the bleach used to clean the flasks contained the ingredient hypochlorite.

This is just the technical name for one type of bleach,

but Liu was used to seeing it in scientific papers.

He knew that, in your body, special white blood cells engulf bacteria

and then wipe them out by flooding them with hypochlorite.

After that, Liu went on to show that during an infection, strep uses its pigment,

which is a carotenoid, similar to what's in carrots and tomatoes, as a kind of shield.

This makes it harder for immune cells to destroy the bacteria.

And because the mutant Strep didn't have any pigment,

they weren't protected from the hypochlorite bleach.

So by making the most of three chance encounters,

Liu revealed a totally new reason why strep infections are so deadly.

And his mom probably earned some bragging rights, too.

Number 3: another serendipitous discovery in insects.

15 or so years ago, budding evolutionary biologist Liz Tibbetts

was investigating the complex social structures of certain paper wasps.

These are social wasps that make nests out of chewed up wood.

To draw conclusions about how the wasps interact, researchers in this line of work

dot the backs of the insects with different colors of model airplane paint.

With these labels, scientists can then put the whole colony together,

turn on a video camera, and track each insect as they go about their lives.

One day, Tibbetts was reviewing a movie and realized she'd messed up:

She had missed painting the backs of two of the wasps.

And at first, she was kinda bummed, since she figured she'd have to scrap the video and start all over.

But as she looked closer at the two paint-free wasps,

she saw that each one had distinct markings on their faces.

She could actually tell which one was which!

And if she could do that, well, maybe the wasps could, too.

Nobody thought insects could tell each other apart, least of all visually.

But once Tibbetts had the insight to ask whether it was there for a reason,

she started checking out more wasp faces and found a remarkable amount of diversity.

Some wasps had bright yellow eyebrows, while others had unique spots

or other stripes and shapes.

To find out whether all those markings meant anything to the insects,

she went ahead and gave some of them a makeover,

painting on different features with a toothpick.

And when she re-introduced the dolled up ones to the rest of the colony,

fellow wasps lashed out and attacked them, no longer seeing them as friends.

This showed not only that wasps were capable of recognizing faces,

but also that the skill was an important part of the social glue

that holds the colony together and helps it function.

OK, so you've probably heard at least a little about CRISPR-Cas9,

the genome-editing tool scientists have been going gaga over in recent years.

And we've definitely talked about it more than once here on SciShow.

It's basically a set of molecular scissors that we can precisely target to anywhere in DNA.

The system was originally found in bacteria as a way they fight off viruses.

But scientists are learning how to use it to modify DNA sequences in other organisms.

Including, potentially, us.

The Cas9 is the scissors part, it's the protein that does the cutting.

The thing is, though, it pretty much only cuts DNA,

so it doesn't work very well on RNA,

the intermediate molecule your body makes before creating proteins.

And that's kind of a bummer, because scientists would love to also be able to edit RNA.

If they could do it, they might be able to treat specific RNA-based diseases,

like a type of dementia, or fix things without touching the underlying DNA sequence.

Well, the good news is, scientists might have just found a breakthrough.

This year, a group of biological chemists at the University of Michigan

uncovered a new Cas9 protein that acts on RNA, and it was totally unintentional.

They were working in their usual model system, a specific bacteria that causes meningitis,

and were testing for the basic cutting ability of the protein.

For a control group, they had incubated the protein with RNA.

The whole point was that it wasn't supposed to touch the RNA, while it would cut the DNA.

But time after time, the RNA was being sliced and diced as well.

Eventually, the team realized what was happening,

and that they had a dual DNA and RNA cutter on their hands.

And other research teams are also beginning to report they've found similar things,

although whether those were also happy accidents remains to be seen.

This next fortuitous discovery is an oldie but a goodie: the invention of the implantable pacemaker.

In 1956, electrical engineer Wilson Greatbatch was trying to build a machine

that could record heart rhythms.

But in the course of putting the thing together, he put in the wrong transistor.

Transistors are circuitry components

that can turn the flow of electrons on or off, like a switch.

Greatbatch accidentally grabbed one that was too powerful for what he needed,

and it made the device pulse about once every second.

And he was stunned.

He recognized that the rhythm was the same as a heartbeat,

and that the electric pulse could probably be used to snap unruly hearts back into step.

Greatbatch then got to work trying to miniaturize his device

so it could fit inside a human body.

Two years later, he had a prototype working in a dog,

and then the first human patient got one in 1960.

Thanks to that chance discovery, they've been changing lives ever since.

And finally, a lab error that led to a more Earth-friendly plastic.

A few years ago, IBM chemist Jeannette Garcia was trying to make a new plastic

from three starter ingredients.

She was a little impatient and started heating two of the substances together

while she went over to the scale to measure out the third.

And when she returned, she found a white pellet attached to her flask.

She struggled to get it out, so much so that she had to use a hammer to shatter the glass.

Although weirdly, the new plastic wasn't hurt by the hammer.

Now, Garcia could have tossed everything out.

The intended experiment was a failure, and she had ruined some glassware.

She could've just chalked it up to her impatience and moved on.

But instead, she was intrigued by the unusual strength of this new material.

And additional experiments revealed the plastic to be not only super-strong, but also recyclable.

Which, in the world of plastics, is actually kind of a big thing.

Part of the deal with high-strength plastics, otherwise known as thermosets,

is that once they're made and molded into a shape, they're like that forever.

You can't melt them down to re-use them, which means you can't recycle them.

But Garcia found that if she dunked the new plastic in sulfuric acid, it could be re-used.

And the same research group found that a second plastic with the same type of chemistry

can also self-heal, re-forming bonds if it's cut.

So, so much for mise en place, I guess.

Garcia's lack of preparation turned out to be a boon,

and opened up a whole new world of recyclable plastics.

In each of these accidental discoveries, there was an element of chance.

If Garcia hadn't combined those two ingredients just so,

or Greatbatch hadn't pulled out the wrong transistor, nothing would have come of it.

And we wouldn't be talking about them today.

But what really ties them together is an openness to think about what's right in front of them,

to recognize something as being different, and interesting,

and potentially important, and to ask questions about it.

So, all you accidental discoverers-to-be out there, even when you make a mistake,

stay curious. And see where it takes you!

Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow, and special thanks to our patrons on Patreon.

You guys rock!

If you'd like to help us keep exploring discoveries like these,

you can go to patreon.com/scishow.

[♪ OUTRO]

For more infomation >> 6 Accidental Discoveries You've Probably Never Heard Of - Duration: 10:23.

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史蒂芬·埃德伯格:「網壇紳士」 - Duration: 3:23.

For more infomation >> 史蒂芬·埃德伯格:「網壇紳士」 - Duration: 3:23.

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巴薩夏天將引進三大強援!兩人已基本敲定 另一人出自皇馬青訓 - Duration: 3:39.

For more infomation >> 巴薩夏天將引進三大強援!兩人已基本敲定 另一人出自皇馬青訓 - Duration: 3:39.

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여배우의 평균 체중 '50kg'|조회수8.212.910 - Duration: 3:45.

For more infomation >> 여배우의 평균 체중 '50kg'|조회수8.212.910 - Duration: 3:45.

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La gran ofensa de la podemita Paula Vázquez a la Guardia Civil le sale muy caro || LVTNAszok - Duration: 5:05.

For more infomation >> La gran ofensa de la podemita Paula Vázquez a la Guardia Civil le sale muy caro || LVTNAszok - Duration: 5:05.

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나는 여동생과 집에 가서 집에 와서 아내에게 눈물을 흘려야한다.|조회수8.212.910 - Duration: 3:08.

For more infomation >> 나는 여동생과 집에 가서 집에 와서 아내에게 눈물을 흘려야한다.|조회수8.212.910 - Duration: 3:08.

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검은 팬 글 머리 기호 및 팬 서명 모양 그룹|조회수8.212.910 - Duration: 3:22.

For more infomation >> 검은 팬 글 머리 기호 및 팬 서명 모양 그룹|조회수8.212.910 - Duration: 3:22.

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Ryse: Son of Rome | GTX 1060 | i7 8700k PC Gameplay with FPS - Duration: 12:23.

Ryse: Son of Rome | GTX 1060 | i7 8700k PC Gameplay with FPS

Ryse: Son of Rome | GTX 1060 | i7 8700k PC Gameplay with FPS

For more infomation >> Ryse: Son of Rome | GTX 1060 | i7 8700k PC Gameplay with FPS - Duration: 12:23.

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이벤트 BJ Geo는 많은 아이돌 그룹이 '합의'를 얻을 수없는 이유를 밝혔다.|조회수8.212.910 - Duration: 3:43.

For more infomation >> 이벤트 BJ Geo는 많은 아이돌 그룹이 '합의'를 얻을 수없는 이유를 밝혔다.|조회수8.212.910 - Duration: 3:43.

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See More Angel Numbers?

For more infomation >> See More Angel Numbers?

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Form 3 English Video Project (Ver 2) - Duration: 1:44.

We are going to participate in a video project competition.

Who would like to join the competition?

Me!

Oh, Thomas is eating.

Thomas! Keep the place clean!

And do the project now.

Oh, Clement is playing the game-boy.

Clement, don't play the game-boy

Come on, let's do the video project now.

Ricky! Stop sleeping on my bed!

I like......sleeping!

I like playing game-boy.

I like eating egg-tart!

And I love doing English Video Project!

Okay!

Maybe we can let "My favorite things" as our topic.

They are doing English Video Project...seriously.

They have done....for at least 10 hours.

At last, they win the price!

THE END! (Harlem Shake)

For more infomation >> Form 3 English Video Project (Ver 2) - Duration: 1:44.

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10 Different Man Bun Styles - Men's Long Hairstyles - Duration: 10:12.

- If you have a man bun, or you're in the process

of growing one, you are definitely in the right place,

because in this video I'm going to be showing you

10 different man bun variations

that you probably never knew existed.

(jazz fanfare)

Firstly, I'm Thomas, and welcome to my channel.

I make style and hair related videos every single week

and this is episode one of my man bun monthly series.

Now, I've decided to make this series because I've finally

grown my full man bun out and I'm so excited about it

and I thought bringing a series to you

about just how to maintain a man bun

and giving man bun inspiration would be

really good for you guys, seeing as I know

a lot of you are going for that.

This is just a new way for us to connect

and talk about something that we all relate to.

So if you are into that, make sure you subscribe

and look out for once a month because I'm gonna be posting

a lot of man bun content coming up.

In today's episode, we're gonna be talking

about the different man bun variations that there are.

Now, I picked 10 that I thought were pretty cool,

but there are seriously like so many variations

that you can go with, so I've narrowed it down

to 10 that I think are really funky

and I'm gonna share them with you.

You might be growing a man bun and what I want this to do

is just give you an idea of what man bun you could go for.

You might not have even made your decision yet and hopefully

this helps you get a little bit more clear on that, okay?

So for man bun number one we're gonna be talking

about the most generic one that we've probably all seen,

the man bun with the disconnected undercut.

This is the first man bun that I ever had.

I had this when I was living in Canada and yeah,

it was pretty much the first time I had ever

seen a man bun and it was trending online.

I did my first hair tutorial, was of the man bun

with an undercut and it served me really well.

I thought it was really slick, really awesome,

and I still see a lot of people getting it.

A lot of people in the Facebook group have got them.

This is pretty much the most common man bun

that we probably see.

It also can pass as a top knot, I guess, because well,

when I had mine, my hair was very thick on top,

so it's always looked like a bun,

but a man bun top knot, same deal.

And I think it's very iconic and it's still

very very popular, even three years later

after making my first video about it.

So that's man bun number one.

Man bun hairstyle number two is the full man bun;

that's me right now.

The full man bun is freakin awesome.

The reason I wanted to grow my full man bun in general

was just because I found with the disconnected

undercut man bun I just didn't have enough hair

and I was running out of hairstyles that I had.

So I thought, "You know what, it's time to get

"more hair going on and I'm gonna grow it all out."

And now I'm finally there and I've been playing around

with many, many different variations of it.

You've got, there's so many of the full man bun,

you've got the high, the normal, and the low,

but you've also got two variations of each of them.

You've got the high messy, the high neat.

You've got the medium messy, the medium neat.

And you've also got the low messy and the low neat.

All of which, I think, look really cool and really different

so I'm gonna be having a bit of B roll of that hanging over

the screen right now so you can actually see the variations.

But yeah, I think my favourite one

to wear is a messy high bun particularly

because it doesn't take that long to do.

It's literally just chucking your hair up

in a bun, nice and high, and I feel like

it suits my face shape the best.

The third man bun on the list is

the braided man bun with an undercut.

So this was a really really cool look that I got

my friend Taren to do on me about three years ago.

We filmed a video of it and it was actually a big hit.

I think on the same day, Lucanfirstgo posted

a man bun braid video as well.

It's just a really nifty, cool, hip-looking style.

And yeah, there was two variations of it,

there was the single braid that I would do

with the man bun and then I also did a couple of tutorials

about how to braid and then also how to do a double braid

with the undercut, which I also thought was really cool.

I'm gonna have B roll of these as well,

floating over the top so you can have

a nice good look at that.

But I think this hairstyle is really really iconic

and really cool and I loved having it when I had it.

Man bun variation number four.

So this one is still another man bun with an undercut.

I can see how these all look very similar,

but the actual looks themselves

look completely different, right?

So this one's called the diamond back undercut

with a man bun and I don't know if you guys remember,

but a little bit, probably about two years ago now,

I was like, "You know what,

"I'm gonna grow out this V shape in the back of my head."

I actually called it a duck bum when I was growing it out.

And a lot of you guys really really liked it.

And the reason I ended up going

and getting the duck bum or the V shape

at the back of my head, was because I found

with the disconnected undercut man bun, it just--

there was like this bulbous part of my head

that would stick out, and I really wasn't a fan of it.

And I was like, "How can I patch this up?"

And I thought, well, I've seen a couple of people

have the diamond shape; it probably came

a little bit further down the back of their head.

And I thought, maybe this is a good way

for me to get rid of that bulbous look.

Anyway, took me probably about four or five months

to grow it out so it could at least get into the bun,

but after I did it, it completely changed the man bun

undercut look for me and I really really liked it.

It took a little bit of working, as well, to get in.

Like I had to go to the hairdresser

and kind of explain what I wanted.

Then they'd have to cut it into shape;

I'd have to look at it.

And they we finally got it into

the right shape and then boom, we were off.

And obviously it's gone now because I've grown

all my hair out, but hey.

Alright, so for man bun number five on the list,

it's the high baller Jon Snow man bun.

So everybody knows what Jon Snow's hair looks like.

We actually have very very similar hair.

And yeah, I kind of really like this look, where it's like--

I think it's just called a high baller, I don't know.

It kind of looks like a bun with a mullet

at the same time, like a curly mullet.

But I don't really know why, but I'm really

really fond of the Jon Snow high baller.

And maybe it's because I like Jon Snow

as a character or maybe because we have the same hair,

I'm just really not sure.

I really like this hairstyle though

and I think it suits me quite well.

Man bun style number six, the lowered undercut man bun.

These are so confusing, all of these names.

But essentially what the lowered undercut man bun is,

is a disconnected undercut for a man bun

but brought right down.

So I spoke about this, I think in my first growing out

process check in, I kind of mentioned

that this is the hairstyle that I wanna go for

in the end, but as I've gotten--

I've mentioned this in a couple of other videos as well,

but as my hair's gotten longer, I've sort of gone,

"Ooh, I don't want to let go of it yet."

I still think this style is really cool.

I first started seeing it on Pinterest.

As soon as I repin one thing, it's like,

"Ooh, Tom likes all of that."

And they start showing me dozens and dozens and dozens

of the same thing and I'm like,

"Okay, this is a trend, I like it, I really do."

But yeah, I'm just not ready to have that haircut yet.

I think eventually I will be getting

the lower disconnected undercut man bun

but I just don't know when it'll be

and it's when I'm gonna disconnect from my hair, literally.

Man bun number seven is the cap man bun,

the exact one that I'm wearing today.

I always think it gives a new dimension to my face.

I don't only just wear it when I feel like

looking a little bit different, but this is actually

the hairdo I'll have when I go for a jog or something.

The sun beams down here in Australia

and wearing a cap with my man bun,

it actually keeps my face shielded

and I think it looks quite groovy, actually.

It just changes things up.

This is also a really good look as well

for when you're growing your hair out,

to try and avoid the awkward stage.

I remember I used to do this a lot

cause I could still poke my bun out of the back

but I would just bobby pin the short sides up so they would

stay out of the way and I didn't look too dorky.

But yeah, I really really like this one as well.

Now for man bun number eight.

So man bun number eight is the midway man bun.

This is one that I made up all by myself.

It looks very similar to the Jon Snow one

except it's straightened and it's for people

that are in the awkward stage.

So I found, when I was going through

the guts of the awkward stage, where it was like

Krusty the Klown, I'd be able to tie up this man bun

but I'd have these prongy-outy sides.

I was like, "What the hell am I gonna do with these?"

And I ended up giving it a straighten

and then I sort of got a load of bobby pins and I went,

"Okay, we're gonna make something out of this."

And I just kind of worked all the bobby pins in to,

I don't know, a nice formation.

And I ended up being really really happy with the hairstyle.

I've actually got a tutorial about it as well.

I'm gonna leave the tutorial up in the cards for you,

so you can go and check that out.

But this man bun is the best for any of you

that are probably midway through,

literally midway through your growing out process

and you want something to help it look a little less shabby.

Really helped me out; I kind of like--

after three inches, I started wearing the midway man bun

pretty much every single day, so really like that one.

And now for man bun number nine.

This one's a relatively new one that I've been starting

to wear since my sides have been longer.

I call it the double side braided man bun.

So this is where I will leave all the top hair on my head

like as a normal man bun but I'll braid the sides.

I don't know, I kind of, in my braiding experience,

I've only really been used to doing it on top of my head.

When you actually have to change the angle

and start braiding another part of your head,

it actually becomes a lot more complex.

But I really dig this look; I think it's cool.

And it's just one that I've made up recently,

so if any of you can braid, I would strongly suggest

you try it out as well.

And now for the final, can I get a drum roll? (drum roll)

Man bun number 10, it is the dreadlocked man bun.

Now, this style isn't gonna be very easy

for everybody to achieve, unless you have dreadlocks,

but it is one sick look; I really like it.

This was another one that popped up on Pinterest.

I saved it once and then all of a sudden

I'm just seeing dreadlocked man buns everywhere

and I think this look is very, very cool.

However, I don't know if I'm ever gonna be

having dreadlocks because I kind of like really nice,

soft feeling hair and having my curls.

But I do really dig this and actually,

anybody that has a dreadlock man bun

that might be watching this, if you could send me an email

with a picture of it, I'd love to feature it

in one of these videos, because I think this look

is one of a kind and really really cool.

And it's a variation that I didn't really think of.

I was kind of like, "Okay, you've got this man bun,

"this man bun, this man bun, that man bun,

"oh, a dreadlocked man bun!"

It just came out of nowhere and I was like,

"That is very, very cool."

And it definitely deserved to be on the list.

And guys, that is my 10 man bun hairstyles.

I hope I was able to show you some really cool

quirky ones that you hadn't seen before.

In the comment section below, let me know

what kind of man bun you're going for and which one

of these man buns was your favourite, okay?

I'd be really interested to know.

On top of that, that's pretty much all

I've really got for you this week.

If you're wanting to be a part of the Facebook group,

make sure you head to the description box below

and hit the subscribe button if you want

some more man bun monthly content,

because I'm gonna be posting a video about man buns

every single month from now on and yeah,

hopefully we can all connect over that as well.

Alright, so until then, I'll see you next week

and I'll catch you later; bye!

For more infomation >> 10 Different Man Bun Styles - Men's Long Hairstyles - Duration: 10:12.

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Première de O Mecanismo teve tapete vermelho estrelado e show de Anitta - Duration: 4:25.

For more infomation >> Première de O Mecanismo teve tapete vermelho estrelado e show de Anitta - Duration: 4:25.

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First luxury hotel in space announced - Duration: 4:50.

Want to see 16 sunrises in one day?

Float in zero gravity?

Be one of the few to have gazed upon our home planet from space?

In just four years' time, and for an astronomical $9.5 million dollars,

it's claimed you can.

What's being billed as the world's first luxury space hotel, Aurora Station,

was announced Thursday at the Space 2.0 Summit in San Jose, California.

Developed by US-based space technology start-up Orion Span,

the fully modular space station will host six people at a time,

including two crew members, for 12-day trips of space travel.

It plans to welcome its first guests in 2022.

"Our goal is to make space accessible to all," Frank Bunger,

CEO and founder of Orion Span, said in a statement.

"Upon launch, Aurora Station goes into service immediately,

bringing travelers into space quickly and at a lower price point than ever seen

before."

Astronaut experience.

While a $10 million trip is outside the budget of most people's two-week vacations,

Orion Span claims to offer an authentic astronaut experience.

Says Bunger, it has "taken what was historically a 24-month training regimen to

prepare travelers to visit a space station and streamlined it to three months,

at a fraction of the cost."

During their 12-day adventure, the super-rich travelers will fly at a height of 200

miles above the Earth's surface in Low Earth Orbit, or LEP,

where they will witness incredible views of the blue planet.

The hotel will orbit Earth every 90 minutes,

which means guests will see around 16 sunrises and sunsets every 24 hours.

Hometown hero.

Activities on board include taking part in research experiments such as growing

food while in orbit -- which guests can take home for a super-smug souvenir --

and soaring over their hometown.

Guests can have live video chats with their less-fortunate loved ones back home via

high-speed wireless Internet access and, upon return to Earth,

will be greeted with a specially arranged hero's welcome.

While enjoying the thrills of zero gravity,

the travelers will be able to float freely through the hotel,

taking in views of the northern and southern aurora from the station's windows.

Deposits are already being accepted for future stays on the space hotel.

The $80,000 is fully refundable, should applicants find themselves unable to rise

to the full $9.5 million.

Travelers will complete a three-month Orion Span Astronaut Certification (OSAC)

program before take-off.

Orion Span has a team of space industry veterans who together have more than 140

years of human space experience.

Orion Span isn't the only venture boldly pushing the frontiers of elite travel into

space.

Axiom Space, a Texas-based company with a former International Space Station

manager at the helm, has plans to put a commercial space station in orbit by 2024.

It says it will begin to take tourists to the ISS in 2019 and later to its own

station.

As yet, Axiom hasn't priced its off-world excursions,

but says it'll be considerably lower than the tag paid by previous space tourists

like Dennis Tito, who stumped up a reported $20 million for a seven-day trip in

2001.

Virgin Galactic, founded by Richard Branson with the aim of taking passengers

briefly into sub-orbital space, will charge for $250,000 for its trips.

Branson originally said flights would begin in 2009,

but an official date has yet to be set for its maiden voyage.

Whatever the price tag, the tourist demographic with spare cash for space jaunts is

presumably quite small.

However, Bunger says that Aurora Station "has multiple uses beyond serving as a

hotel."

It plans to offer fully chartered trips to space agencies and support zero gravity

research and space manufacturing.

Adds Bunger: "Our architecture is such that we can easily add capacity,

enabling us to grow with market demand."

Orion Span's next mission?

To launch the world's first condominiums in space.

For more infomation >> First luxury hotel in space announced - Duration: 4:50.

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Florida school shooting hero blames sheriff, superintendent - Duration: 4:08.

A student gravely wounded while saving his classmates' lives by blocking a door

during the Florida school massacre said Friday that the county sheriff and school

superintendent failed the victims by not arresting the shooter before the attack

and by allowing him to attend the school.

An attorney for 15-year-old Anthony Borges read a statement from him during a news

conference criticizing Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel and Superintendent

Robert Runcie for the Feb. 14 mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School

in Parkland that killed 14 students and three staff members.

Borges was shot five times, suffering wounds to the lungs, abdomen and legs.

He was released from a Fort Lauderdale hospital Wednesday morning,

the last of the 17 wounded to go home.

Borges, too weak to talk, sat silently in a wheelchair with his right leg propped

up.

His statement specifically attacked the Promise program,

a school district and sheriff office initiative that allows students who commit

minor crimes on campus to avoid arrest if they complete rehabilitation.

Runcie has said shooting suspect Nikolas Cruz, a former Stoneman Douglas student,

was never in the program, but Borges and his attorney, Alex Arreaza,

said school and sheriff's officials knew Cruz was dangerous.

Deputies received at least a dozen calls about Cruz, 19,

over the years and he spent two years in a school for children with emotional and

disciplinary problems before being allowed to transfer to Stoneman Douglas.

Last year, records show, he was forced to leave after incidents --

other students said he abused an ex-girlfriend and fought her new boyfriend.

Weeks before the shooting, both the FBI and the sheriff's office received calls

saying Cruz could become a school shooter but took no action.

Runcie and Israel "failed us students, teachers and parents alike on so many

levels," Arreaza read for Borges, who sat next to his father, Roger.

"I want all of us to move forward to end the environment that allowed people like

Nikolas Cruz to fall through the cracks.

You knew he was a problem years ago and you did nothing.

He should have never been in school with us."

Arreaza said the family supports the efforts by Stoneman Douglas students David

Hogg, Emma Gonzalez and others to end gun violence but may not always agree with

their methods.

Borges is a U.S. citizen born to Venezuelan immigrants.

Arreaza said that although Borges' father, a maintenance worker,

appreciates that people consider his son a hero for protecting classmates,

he believes such talk detracts from the serious message that action must be taken

to stop school shootings.

"He doesn't want there to be anymore bubblegum hero stuff," Arreaza said.

Anthony Borges visited Stoneman Douglas for the first time since the shooting

Thursday but said in his statement that he is scared to return,

fearing there could be more violence.

He recently told NBC's "Today" show that he thought he was going to die and that

he's lucky to be alive.

More than $830,000 has been raised for him in online donations,

but Arreaza said his medical bills will likely exceed $1.5 million.

The family plans to file a lawsuit soon against Cruz,

the estate of his late mother and a family that housed him before the shooting.

Under state law, the family can't sue the school district and sheriff's office

until a six-month waiting period expires in August.

The sheriff's office and school district did not return after-hours calls and

emails Friday seeking comment.

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